| SEPARATETABLES | Two one-act plays by Sir Terence Rattigan set at a hotel in Bournemouth |
| SEPARATE | --- Tables, collective name of two one-act plays by Terence Rattigan (8) |
| FAMILYALBUM | One of the one-act plays in Noel Coward's "Tonight at 8:30" cycle |
| HARROW | Public school attended by Lord Byron and Sir Terence Rattigan (6) |
| HABITAT | Natural domain of an animal or plant; or, formerly, a range of furniture designed by Sir Terence Conran (7) |
| TARTETATIN | French fruit pastry supposedly created by accident at a hotel in Lamotte-Beuvron |
| RABBI | When I saw a religious community leader in a bar in Bournemouth, I was most surprised! (5) |
| WESTHILL | I had five nights at a hotel in Wells before travelling on to a place near Ottery St Mary (4,4) |
| BELLHOP | He may call for you at a hotel in New York (7) |
| INUIT | Northerner's brief stay at a hotel in Paris? (5) |
| AGATHE | Where Duddy Kravitz works at a hotel in the Laurentians, Sainte-___-des-monts |
| SKITS | Humorous, brief one-act plays |
| ATONCE | One-act plays with no delay (2,4) |
| BOSNIA | My son and I had a place in Bournemouth before we relocated to a country in southern Europe (6) |
| ROYALBLUE | Coach company founded by Thomas Elliott in Bournemouth in 1880 (5,4) |
| SALOME | One act play by Oscar Wilde first published in English in 1894 (6) |
| MICCHECKS | Utterances of "One, two, one, two," and a phonetic clue to four features of this puzzle |
| GHETTO | Arrive at a hotel in an impoverished area (6) |
| STIBB | The backpackers had got a bit confused and ended up in Bournemouth, when they were meant to be going to a place near Kilkhampton! (5) |
| MARYSHELLEY | Authoress in a Wetherspoon's name in Bournemouth (11) |